H03F2203/45352

Phase shifter with bidirectional amplification
11581644 · 2023-02-14 · ·

An apparatus is disclosed for bidirectional amplification with phase-shifting. In example implementations, an apparatus includes a phase shifter with a bidirectional amplifier. The bidirectional amplifier includes a first transistor coupled between a first plus node and a second minus node, a second transistor coupled between a first minus node and a second plus node, a third transistor coupled between the first plus node and the second minus node, and a fourth transistor coupled between the first minus node and the second plus node. The bidirectional amplifier also includes a fifth transistor coupled between the first plus node and the second plus node, a sixth transistor coupled between the first minus node and the second minus node, a seventh transistor coupled between the first plus node and the second plus node, and an eighth transistor coupled between the first minus node and the second minus node.

RADIO FREQUENCY SYSTEM SWITCHING POWER AMPLIFIER SYSTEMS AND METHODS
20180006619 · 2018-01-04 ·

Systems and method for improving operation of a radio frequency system are provided. One embodiment includes a switching power amplifier that outputs an amplified analog electrical signal based on an input electrical signal and voltage of an envelope voltage supply rail. The switching power amplifier includes a first transistor with a gate that receives the input electrical signal, a source electrically coupled to the envelope voltage supply rail, and a drain electrically coupled to an output of the switching power amplifier; a second transistor with a gate that receives the input electrical signal, a source electrically coupled to ground, and a drain electrically coupled to the output; and a third transistor with a gate that receives the input electrical signal, a drain electrically coupled to the envelope voltage supply rail, and a source electrically coupled to an output of another switching power amplifier.

RECEIVER, MEMORY AND TESTING METHOD
20230019429 · 2023-01-19 · ·

A receiver includes the following: a signal receiving circuit, including a first MOS transistor and a second MOS transistor, where a gate of the first MOS transistor is configured to receive a reference signal and a gate of the second MOS transistor is configured to receive a data signal, and the signal receiving circuit is configured to output a comparison signal, the comparison signal being configured to represent a magnitude relationship between a voltage value of the reference signal and a voltage value of the data signal; and an adjusting circuit, including a third MOS transistor, where a source of the third MOS transistor is connected to a source of the first MOS transistor, a drain of the third MOS transistor is connected to a drain of the first MOS transistor, and a gate of the third MOS transistor is configured to receive an adjusting signal.

Amplifier with low component count and accurate gain
11695377 · 2023-07-04 · ·

An amplifier including a P-channel transistor having current terminals coupled between a first node and a second node and having a control terminal coupled to a third node receiving an input voltage, an N-channel transistor having current terminals coupled between a fourth node developing an output voltage and a supply voltage reference and having a control terminal coupled to the second node, a first resistor coupled between the first node and a supply voltage, a second resistor coupled between the first and fourth nodes, and a current sink sinking current from the second node to the supply reference node. The amplifier may be converted to differential form for amplifying a differential input voltage. Current devices may be adjusted for common mode, and may be moved or added to improve headroom or to improve power supply rejection. Chopper circuits may be added to reduce 1/f noise.

Differential RF power detector with common mode rejection

A power detector circuit that rejects the common mode portion of a differential signal is disclosed. The circuit includes a differential input having first and second input nodes. Differential and common mode circuit paths are coupled to the differential input. The common mode circuit path includes first and second capacitors coupled to respective first terminals of first and second input nodes of the differential input. The second terminal of each of the first and second capacitors is coupled to a gate terminal of a first bias transistor. The common mode circuit path is configured to reject a common mode portion of a differential input signal provided to the differential input such that a differential output signal is indicative of an amount of power of a differential portion of the differential input signal.

AMPLIFIER WITH LOW COMPONENT COUNT AND ACCURATE GAIN
20230118374 · 2023-04-20 ·

An amplifier including a P-channel transistor having current terminals coupled between a first node and a second node and having a control terminal coupled to a third node receiving an input voltage, an N-channel transistor having current terminals coupled between a fourth node developing an output voltage and a supply voltage reference and having a control terminal coupled to the second node, a first resistor coupled between the first node and a supply voltage, a second resistor coupled between the first and fourth nodes, and a current sink sinking current from the second node to the supply reference node. The amplifier may be converted to differential form for amplifying a differential input voltage. Current devices may be adjusted for common mode, and may be moved or added to improve headroom or to improve power supply rejection. Chopper circuits may be added to reduce 1/f noise.

Circuit employing MOSFETs and corresponding method

A MOSFET has a current conduction path between source and drain terminals. A gate terminal of the MOSFET receives an input signal to facilitate current conduction in the current conduction path as a result of a gate-to-source voltage reaching a threshold voltage. A body terminal of the MOSFET is coupled to body voltage control circuitry that is sensitive to the voltage at the gate terminal of the MOSFET. The body voltage control circuitry responds to a reduction in the voltage at the gate terminal of the MOSFET by increasing the body voltage of the MOSFET at the body terminal of the MOSFET. As a result, there is reduction in the threshold voltage. The circuit configuration is applicable to amplifier circuits, comparator circuits and current mirror circuits.

DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT AND RADAR DEVICE
20170310292 · 2017-10-26 ·

A differential amplifier circuit comprises: first and second input terminals; first and second output terminals; a first transistor comprising a gate terminal connected to the first input terminal; a second transistor comprising a gate terminal connected to the second input terminal; a first resistor connected between the source terminal of the first transistor and the source terminal of the second transistor; a third transistor comprising a drain terminal connected to the source terminal of the first transistor, a gate terminal connected to the drain terminal of the first transistor, and a source terminal connected to the first output terminal; a fourth transistor comprising a drain terminal connected to the source terminal of the second transistor, a gate terminal connected to the drain terminal of the second transistor, and a source terminal connected to the second output terminal; first to fourth current sources; and second and third resistors.

WIDEBAND ADAPTIVE BIAS CIRCUITS FOR POWER AMPLIFIERS

Methods and apparatus for providing adaptive biasing to power amplifiers. Adaptive bias circuits are configured to provide sharp turn on and/or current clamping to improve the efficiency of a power amplifier over a wide input signal bandwidth. Sharp turn on may be achieved using a subtraction technique to subtract outputs from multiple detectors. Clamping may be achieved using MOSFET device characteristics to pull the device from the triode region into the saturation, subtraction techniques to subtract the outputs from multiple detectors, and/or by using circuit devices, such as diodes.

ACTIVE LINEARIZATION FOR BROADBAND AMPLIFIERS
20170264252 · 2017-09-14 ·

For broadband data communication, a data signal voltage at a signal input node can be converted to an output signal current at a signal output node. A first transistor device can contribute to the output signal current, with its transconductance or other gain reduced to accommodate larger signal swings, at which a second transistor can turn on and increase an effective resistance value of at least a portion of a gain degeneration resistor associated with the first transistor device. The second transistor can also contribute to the output signal current to help maintain or enhance an overall gain between the signal input node and the signal output node. Multiple secondary stages, push-pull arrangements, buffer amplifier configurations (which may or may not contribute to current in the gain degeneration resistor), input and output transformers, negative feedback to help reduce component variability, and frequency modification circuits or components are also described.